Doors to Diplomacy Participants

Kang Chiao International School-Linkou campus(JH) (2026 CyberFair Project ID 8844)
Taiwan, New Taipei City
Official Status: Final Project: Ready for Judging
Teacher:
Category: 3. Business and Community Organizations

We estimate 5 student(s) from 12 to 14 will work on this entry.

Description of Our Community: Our community is centered on our school, where learning, technology, and critical thinking meet every day. When you enter the campus, you see bright posters, project displays, and students’ work that show our energy and imagination. Our school is not only about classes — it is also about character, teamwork, and being good citizens. Like Taiwan’s role in the global semiconductor industry, our school connects ideas to something bigger. In class, students explore science, technology, engineering, and math. We learn that even small things, such as circuits and chips, can change our world. Each student contributes to group projects, science fairs, and class discussions. This teamwork reflects how Taiwan contributes chip design, manufacturing, and testing to support global technology. Our school also shows the idea of “unite.” Students from different backgrounds and with different interests come together to solve problems. Group experiments and research projects teach us how cooperation gives better results. By studying semiconductors for CyberFair, we see how Taiwan’s partnerships with global companies are like the teamwork we practice at school. We also care about responsibility. We talk about environmental challenges in technology, learn about sustainable innovations, and explore how the industry trains future workers. These lessons remind us that our generation helps shape the future. In short, our school is more than a place to study. It is a growing community where learning connects people — just as semiconductors connect ideas, people, and the world.

Project Description: Our project, Taiwan’s Semiconductors: The Lead to Future Technologies, explores how Taiwan’s semiconductor industry connects our daily lives to the global community. Chips are very small, but they power many devices we use every day: phones, laptops, AI systems, and medical tools. We wanted to learn how Taiwan’s chip design, manufacturing, packaging, and testing contribute to the world and how these industries unite companies and people through cooperation. To do this, we studied the full supply chain: upstream design, midstream wafer manufacturing, and downstream packaging and testing. We also conducted interviews with three industry professionals from materials, packaging & testing, and plastics research. Their explanations helped us see how each part of the industry works and depends on others. Our research found that Taiwan’s success comes from technology, government support, strong education, and tight cooperation across the supply chain. We also found major challenges, such as high energy and water needs, strict cleanroom rules, and the push for greener technologies. This topic matters because semiconductors are the base of modern technology and global innovation. Taiwan supplies many critical chips, so its industry affects world trade, security, and everyday life. With this CyberFair project, we hope to help others understand the hidden systems behind chips and show how teamwork and responsibility let this industry truly contribute to and unite the world.

Click Here to View Project Narrative